articleBritish Journal of Political ScienceJun 19, 2015BRONZE OA

Rumors and Health Care Reform: Experiments in Political Misinformation

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Indexed incrossrefdoaj

Abstract

This article explores belief in political rumors surrounding the health care reforms enacted by Congress in 2010. Refuting rumors with statements from unlikely sources can, under certain circumstances, increase the willingness of citizens to reject rumors regardless of their own political predilections. Such source credibility effects, while well known in the political persuasion literature, have not been applied to the study of rumor. Though source credibility appears to be an effective tool for debunking political rumors, risks remain. Drawing upon research from psychology on ‘fluency’ – the ease of information recall – this article argues that rumors acquire power through familiarity. Attempting to quash…

Citation impact

708
total citations
FWCI
138.24
Percentile
100%
References
52
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Rumor
  • Persuasion
  • Misinformation
  • Credibility
  • Politics
  • Source credibility
  • Recall
  • Fluency
No related works found for this paper.